Older Arctic Sea Ice Disappearing: What does this mean for us and our planet?

Ramtha forecasted the melting of the icecaps and warned about its devastating effect decades ago — since the early 1980s — before Climate Change became a scientific fact as it is today.

See NASA’s satellite generated animation. Seeing is believing!

“Arctic sea ice has not only been shrinking in surface area in recent years, it’s becoming younger and thinner as well. In this animation, where the ice cover almost looks gelatinous as it pulses through the seasons, cryospheric scientist Dr. Walt Meier of NASA Goddard Space Flight Center describes how the sea ice has undergone fundamental changes during the era of satellite measurements.” (NASA’s Goddard Space flight Center/Jefferson Beck). Watch NASA’s Animation from Satellite data here

Now what does this really mean for us and our coastal cities?

“Atmospheric CO2 at the tracking station in Mauna Loa, Hawaii averaged over 401.5 parts per million in October, more than 3 ppm higher than a year ago.”

“The monthly global average concentration of this greenhouse gas first surpassed 400 ppm in March 2015.”

“Scientists estimate that the last time that carbon dioxide levels remained as high as 400 ppm was probably between 3.2 million and five million years ago.” Read full report by NUNATSIAQ NEWS

Ramtha on Climate Change and the melting of the icecaps:

“Now your world is in trouble. Your icecaps are melting. The North Pole’s icecaps are melting and when all that cold water enters Greenland in the upper Atlantic, the flow of warm water will cease in Atlatia and in a short time you are going to have catastrophic conditions in the world.”